Graph x-y=2. I understand why it is -2 on y-axis, but why is it "2" on the x-axis?
2 Answers
Explanation:
#"How to find where "x-y=2" crosses the x and y axes"#
#• "For the y-intercept, let x = 0 in the equation "#
#• "For the x-intercept, let y = 0 in the equation "# Let
#x=0#
#x-y=2#
#0-y=2#
#y=-2larrcolor(red)"y-intercept"# Let
#y=0#
#x-y=2#
#x - 0=2#
#x = 2larrcolor(red)"x-intercept"#
graph{(y-x+2)((x-0)^2+(y+2)^2-0.04)((x-2)^2+(y-0)^2-0.04)=0 [-10, 10, -5, 5]}
The
Explanation:
You can graph this line in a couple of ways.
One way is to turn the equation into the slope-intercept form of the equation, which is
Another way is to plot both intercepts and draw the line through these points.
Finding the y intercept
The
This is automatically the place where
One trick to finding the
Then solve for
Cover up
░░
Now it's pretty easy to see that
That gives you the coordinates of the
And here is the good part.
You can use the exact same trick to find the
Finding the
The
You can solve the equation for
Or you can just solve it visually by covering the entire
So the coordinates for the
This "fingertip" trick is especially useful where there are coefficients for
Example:
When you let
░░
And when you let
This trick lets you rapidly solve for
Often you can solve it instantly just in your head.